Shortly after news of the error started to spread, the Denver Post released a statement addressing the blunder.

"Due to a production error, an image of Citizens Bank Park ran in place of Coors Field on the cover of today's Life & Culture section. Please enjoy this beautiful image of Coors Field photographed yesterday. The Denver Post sincerely regrets the errors," the tweet read.

Due to a production error, an image of Citizens Bank Park ran in place of Coors Field on the cover of today's Life & Culture section. Please enjoy this beautiful image of Coors Field photographed yesterday. The Denver Post sincerely regrets the error. pic.twitter.com/0bwW2snOLb

"What a lovely photo of Citizens Bank Park. Right @denverpost," the tweet read along with a winky face emoji.

Others also joined in on the mockery.

The most astounding part of the Rockies’ hometown paper publishing a photo of the Phillies’ ballpark is that based on their tweeted apology they only noticed it around 8:20 MDT #NeverCutCopyEditorshttps://t.co/VLqb3XgVyo

Weird how the Denver Post laid off a ton of journalists, then printed a photo of the stadium in Philadelphia with "Phillies" all over it and called it Coors Field, I'm sure those are two totally unrelated things that happened. https://t.co/0aGY5oym5O